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P age Five | SOCIALISTS IN 1917 HELPED | INTENSIFY RED Yailed Delegation of the “10500 REDS" BOSSES DRAG WORKERS ELECTION DRIVE | /2/¢ss Call on Working — — cuneye PENNA, Women toVote Communist °'@88F® INTO THE WORLD WAR IN WISCONSIN ee BOSSES’ PRESS Way Out of | German Socialists. In France it was Fight the Boss Agent, ing Plaza Hall; ‘Intensify Election Campaign! the Socialist Party area MILWAUKEE, ¥ Sept. 17—| Harts Island penitentiary and Rik-| “Women workers! Nehmer, Communist candi-| ers* Island penitentiary where they|en workers! Young w date for Secretary of State, and| are imprisoned for accepting the| ers! You suffer just as Donald Burke, candidate for State) task given them by the 110,000 un-/ers do! You must throw your ful Senator and two other Communist ymunists Have Full t for Election F : |tions, for defense of the S NEW YORK. — Writing from! Union. Urges They Rally at Conference Today in Irvy- was the English Socialists like Ar ‘Socialists in U. §.,” says Mor: thur Henderson. In Belgium it was he King’s m ter, Vandervelde, Hillquit, ‘will not handicap the U. S. cnet ** | employment demonstrators on) energy into the election campaign Government by Strikes. If the ar-| #24 others. Workers left today for a month’s | Union Square to carry demands for| behind the Communist Party. You | mass conferer I A | AN over the world the Socialists tour through the state in order to) relief to the Tammany city gov-|must organize Vote Commur ( mies are raised by conscription, of), een ‘ ‘ : rally the workers and farmers in| y many ganize mun ; i § _| helped the big bosses drag millions - Z : 5, ernment, Foster, Minor, Amter and T course, we will have to serve a8 of workers into the hell of the World ‘upport of the Communist Party.) Raymond yesterday addressed the I. AMTER. c re other citizens. I do not believe that! War. The ten millions dead who aes car left iu one thousand | ¢oyiowing statement to women I ) the Socialists will advocate any gen- | died in the World War, the millions Daily Workers, two thousand elec- workers: tion platforms, and fifteen thousand | eral industrial strike to Handicap [oe widows, the millions of children State leaflets and pluggers. the country in its war preparations |left fatherless, the thousands who “Today 10,000,000 women gain- fully employed and half of them TT ; 1 i: 2 Com- and I do not believe there will be|stump about the streets of Berlin, The tour will cover such impor-| (5,000,000) ‘working in indnstry, aide ay ballot any such strike, I know of no in-|Paris and New York, their limbs tant citis as, Sheboygan, Manitovas,| makes the working woman an im- t naeded: stance in any country where we| tern off in the World War—all these is Two Rivers, Green Bay, Superior, | portant factor in the industrial and Ashland, Appleton, Oshkosh, Fond] political life of the country. Lac, etc. In all of these towns| “But now a large section of these mass meetings will be held preceded | s will workers are part of the army of by general distrilfution of leaflets, | 000,000 unemployed; millions are sale of Daily Workers, etc. In these | working part-time. Starvation and towns organizational results will be| misery face them—a winter of hor- | Stressed. ror is ahead. Wage cuts are tak- ; In addition to this, thousands of| jing place in all industries, the farmers will be reached on the tour} bosses are determined to make the and in many small towns where no workers shoulder the burdens of meetings will be held, there will b@| the crisis. a general distribution of Party Spectre of Hunger. | literature. “In all capitalist countries the The landslide victory of La Fol- same spectre of hunger faces the have tried a general strike either|can charge much up to these be- trayers of the toiling masses. The German Socialist Party was a pow- erful one. The French Socialist to prevent or to end a war.” This is what the American “So-| cialist,” Morris Hillquit, said in New | ni York Times, the voice of Wall|Party was a powerful one. The Street, on February 11, 1917 this | American Socialist Party numbered was only a short Gaven ayecka pe-|2bout 100,000. All these Socialist fore Wall Street, thru the mouth of | Parties had control over trade un- Woodrow Wilson and Congress, de- [00S influence over many hundreds clared war on Germany. This ar.|Of thousands of workers, and many ticle of Hillquit’s came out, just a/ PeWwspaper , has no such gnatures, and does not g The capitalist press is in- was going to take up the question of the war. Hillquit’s treacherous words helped to put pressure on the! committee. could have hindered the war to such a great extent that there would have been an early peace—IF they want- ed to fight against the bosses. The | lette over Kohler in the primaries is a sign of the discontent of the farm- jing masses, in particular, with the |old guard Republicans. The party | working class and the workers are “In Germany last Sunday 4,500,- 000 workers went to the polls and cast a vote for struggle against Communist Party candic Congress from the nerd ¢ sional District. e ineulde Hillquit knew at the time what| Workers did not want to go to war | in its tour will sharply expose the | hunger, wage cuts, reparations— bape nines anes Col. House, Woodrow Wilson’s Wall | for their bosses. The workers did jrole of the La Follettes who are|for the Communist Party and Committees in the sho I as nob male Street pal and direct boss, told|?Ot feel any immediate interests in Ion efor far Nels Work: | utilizing the discontent among the | Soviet Government. The German) the revolutionary u! a 1 ; ‘1 roation Saar years later—that it was a war for|the war. But these Socialist blood- masses by shouting progressive | workers are strengthening their/ Trade Union Unity League. Yo E any ‘Wall Street, pure and simple. He ee eae He edobat tHe phrases to save the name of the Re-|ranks for the fight against the) must help to mobilize the worl Revives On Hallet irty work, halped to allot. knew that it was a war to protect publican Party, the party of unem- capitalist class and government. | behind the Communist pro t candidates, ployment and mass misery, and to|The struggle is becoming sharper| and candidates on the sl help the bosses to increase their|in the colonies. The workers and) class against cla’ D h ig cffensive against the working | poor farmers the world over are! day and to continue till, ork- Baw snd § ata WO AVS OY OY 3 in masses. However, the main danger | preparing to overthrow the capi-| ers’ and Farmers’ Government has! Govern: ae ‘ |comes from the Socialist Party | talist system. r ” 9 elms of rot ame ta toes me Os mar Dayton ‘Wh eltare’ Ass'n Gets Morgan had lent the Allies. He It Was exactly knew that any talk of a “War to| against the bosses’ World War and End All Wars” and a war “To Save| against Hillquit and his Socialist the World for Democracy” was all| brothers that the Communist Inter- few weeks before emergency meet-| They could have stopped the ing of the National Executive Com-| bosses’ war, turned it into a civil mittee of the Socialist Party which| War against the bosses, or at least, . . [een me |been established in th d enaeer fake. He knew that the stuff about | tational avas born. CG 4 ty Ne ad: Al which is receiving open support} ‘Elections will soon take place| States. neem full ele Ker ’ “Hun atrocities” was all pure in-| Breaking thru the lines of the 10Ce11eS rom cs ce les: | from the big capitalists of Wiscon-| in the United States—elections of| “Women workers! Rally to astria be P | in Sad da Heth aera ene heart 0 ventions, dished up in order to whip| warring countries a number of mem- poder es . lew tite is nat more “left eee | very great importance. The work-|conference to be held at. Irving ave : up war frenzies. He knew all this bers of Socialist Parties came to- . Pike net eae emi ba as as the masses become more radical: | ergs will show by their votes wheth-| Plaza on Saturday, Sept. 20. y over 2,0 and yet gave the American bosses,|setier from all over Hurope in Unemployed Council Organizing for Fight | ized under the pressure of the crisis. /er the yare ready to strnggle for| this conference the beginning « i diriae gave Wall Street, gave the Morgans| Berne, Switzerland, on Sept., 1917, Against Evictions and Real Relief The Communist Party, the party) the Unemployed Insurance Bill of|campaign that will establish thc i and Rockefellers and Schwabs, ajto fight against the war and against ore AEM aun ae pape the Communist Party, strike} Communist Party as the fighting ciBnAE) art ait eae jor farmers | agai Hi 4 i sts of the entire 3 aC Gare ; Ae nue pameieme i eeu ealeae Socialist betrayers. (By @ Worker Correspondent) he has any friends who will help| calls for a strugele tor “Work or Bea wage cue ee against List in me interest of the enti 49 é 1 aa AE pet pe tametring (the workers of| ‘The Communist International| DAYTON, ©., Sept. 19—The Un-| him, When they are sure that there] Wages” and real social insurance, | rece Ube fee dR AOL Al de a Rea t runs on a Heywood reer reir care wanes thot these, | Keeps up that fight! The Commun-| employed Council No. 1 of Dayté not a brother, sister, grandmother | for better working conditions, no| | uv in national platform. The dem- imran ear ne : e So-| ist Party of the U.S. A, the Amerl-|has been making some inv¢ or any other relative; or best| payment of taxes and annulment of| ry cT oc and th are , ( slican) cea ata akan ie ny | can Section of the Communist Inter-| tions ef unemployed workers in this| friend; and when they are certain] all debts and imbargoes for poor | : Unitas y pines pr onuea aes ne ihe eapatiite 5 ty, |Rational, fights against bosses wars| city and found very interestiig that their children are starving; | farmers, for strikes against wage ; ind beer, but don’t say ay fe 5 tate Se a are ‘nig |204 fights against the betrayers| facts. The purpose of the investiga: | then they make them work for the| cuts, for struggle against war, and | ] OUT tow eet 3 the starving browhor Seciallsts im the other cap. | WHO help the bosses drag the work: | tion is to find out to what extent! city for nothing. tor the overthrow of the system of | : by ah | mi > going to be able to buy Be ereee ccak hte cane, | ae et Sh evictions are taking place so that Chilaren. : 1 poh | | 4 them if they them, BInGHGE italist countries served their bosses | F dren Hungry memployment and misery for the| | eae : | faithfully and well, too. “I know of| Workers everywhere must fight | the Council can begin a real cam-| Most of these unemployed we ap-| masses, or bosses war and lynching. | | = & (which i iia | agai ses (i fali yar! | Paign against evictions. proached have children going t Workers and Farmers of Wiscon- | i | po? sPANce a for unem- : no instance in any country where |aéainst bosses (imperialist) war! ay , broach Oa n going to on Communists Out to Get) $ Ss nee Is . : we have tried a general strike either |We must remember that it is we| Most of the unemployed who gave) school. Most all of, them walk one (sin support your party, VOTE COM- 25.000 Si Jobbers : Tnsuranc : the promise | to prevent, or to end a war,” Hil-| Workers who suffer most in bosses’|their stories have applied to the/ mile to school and hack one mile,| MUNIST! oo ignatures Big Issue sroken once to abol- ay quit said. ‘ wars, that it is we who are a aed Chae eas for help. O2/The majority of the workers do not _-_ SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 18 nie! a police. Sec- 3 he fert#-| the average of tAree out of five have} jaye money f heir chi y s : Dich ADR pate SBURG, Pa.—With a full! ret of or Davis runs for sen- 1 Hilquit’s own words stand up and Gaukon tide and at the fe! al bbant eotidad help. be a ney an their eupetene 2 Workers Arrested campaigh to get 26,000 signatures — SBURG, Pa. Ge eS ste an eo ) lash back at him thirteen years at-|i#er for the baltiefilds! | We must Work at Cut Prices Lua he eee come | as J City F to put the Party on the ballot in| State ticket and a large number of i hia the bij ses who | home at noon for their lunch i ‘ fled Kent gat t reduced the number of the job- . terward like so many whips. The ane arabe Rae ae ed lg rissa ludt Hise retelFat ue as ee ee t} Im Jersey City Por | caritornia began Sept. ist. The | other candidates filed Sept. 3 at 1 i : 75,000 (this is what the government . | taken care of in this manner. | ¢ i i 3 Organizin, Y.C.L, | 1aws of this state give only 25 days |Secretary of Commonwealtl a T ae ene fi Idiers | £0Te the workers the great fakers | At th 4 ae ree 5 | aign com J says, there must be more) soldiers igii jose an riehds' of the workers, |Family Welfare Association hands| At the sam time these fake chari- in which to get these signatures, | committee including Fri r,|t ers. to: vol: 1 whose bodies lie in many a field in) eople like Hillquit, Thomas ‘and|them a slip to work for the city. ties are now preparing to bleed the] Two young workers, Frank Guildo | but with the mobilization of the | Phila. plumber, candidate er | to use the . France are 75,000 proofs of the | P©0 1 sy S haveca a Pig or workers in November to force them entire Party membership and sym-| ep ioe < : I "i \their kind, who pretend to be| If they have a large family of six and Buck Olden, members of the id zs SBN n to workers of the e treachery of Hillquit and his kind. | |’ aftiat ait but ectuatiy help lead | or seven they are given slips for| t? cont bu to the Community ; Ate | pathetic workers behind this is go-|20F and Samuel Lee, } cea tcl, seeante " Morris Hillquit and his brothers | 0° witbacs (nts aiaastar, | two days’ work. The next day they | Chest. This year the Family Wel- Young Communist League, were t-| ing to be done. shorman, candidate for Lt or, ape ea ee ss : feading the Socialist Party helped | go to work at ditch digging, grass! {ate Association alone is asking|rested last night and held “incom-| ‘Three candidates will run forthe Communist Party will partic ie f| in + yo send these 75,000 American work-| (This exposure first appeared in ii) ny prick laying: or other stren-| $100,000.00 from the Community| municado” for 16 hours without hay-|state offices. Wm. Simons, District | 7] lac! to € si oe ae 1 7 i 4, 1980.) | 8 ying; e ae. aad Aone et ate jin the coming electio : for work or ws to their graves! the Young Worker, Sept. 4 1930.) | yous labor. At the end of the day's | Chest ant $200,000 from the city for Jing any charge placed against them. ee eee eee ete Gerad | Aent (or the Working st | Wa It rely on house to e Eerie pay 9 aa - | work they do not get paid fi , | their 193 nses. t the end o! a {in California is running for Gover- 2 ‘ es hoose ca ane eA tes k cow re Eee pom nE at receive a slip for $2.60 worth | 1980 they expect to have a deficit of | Tse Yous workers were arrested 0," Ogcay torickson, now serving a/the Capitalist Class, ‘There were 1" factory gate . bd gee ee Ohio itso Peay, of groceries. The workers cannot | $100,000. when standing in front of the Work-| sentence of 3 to 42 years in San|signatures filed for the State ticket, | ;,, ir at _meet- r aut down for a period of thyee | £0 to any grocery store; just cer- Jobless Organizing ers Center in Jersey City waiting | Quentin for organizing the agricul-| consisting besides Mozé ee 0 Bsa 4 weeks, hurling five thousand work-|‘#in ones designated by the Asso-| ‘The Unemployed Council is organ- |foT the first meeting to organize al tural workers of the Imperial Val-| patrick E, Cush, Pittsburgh steel gis e CONVINCE THE ers into the ranks of the unem.| lation; and they cannot order the) izing on a sound ba Prepara- | unit of the Y. ©. L. An officer came | !€¥, ads run for Lieutenant Gover-| worker for U. S. Senator, Ue Ser ee 4 ployed. Montgomery Ward laid off| 100d they would like to have. They| tions are being made for the Sepland demanded to know who they| "0% Edgar Owens is running for) oon miner for Secretary IP e B00 men and this week began the| #e told what to get and how much| tember 28th local conference and| were, what they were doing, etc, He | Scere Of State. With Oscar : : : : PAT | y T BD 4 | policy of opening only a half day |‘ set of each. Naturally the cheap-| to sond a delegation to Cleveland| tieq Yo grab & portfolie’ out of |erickton #8 one of the state ticket jot Internal Affairs, Charlotte F. RAL E | 2 f A ay Mondays. The Bethlehem Steel | St food is allowed; such as cab-| to greet Mr. Hoover on October 2nd. Guido’s ta a el 4 rade | te Tepeal of the Criminal Syndt-| Jones, Paci! Attorney for J of : Moss a A | bage, beans, flour. li aiteqdttianters Ob the ats TOVSd Lice eee, ven comrade | calist Law, under which he was sen- 5 - a Co., employing 25,000 men in the e es acquarters of the Unemployed | Guido refused to let him have it he} the Supreme Court and Max ¢ | ] A — Nees A | Before receiving this starvation | Council in Dayton is 10814 §. Jeffer- ; | tenced, will be made a leading fssue f Lae | | sheet mills, recently effected two) tHe the: paties anidse =p re aay sadhixe “REBT ROTA placed the comrades under arrest. | or the campaign. Phila, knitter and Peter Ambridge qty LASER ig Need 3,000 Names to wage cuts, one of 2214 per eent and last legs Be te a ae 2 Dit tl eta aa ft Meetings are held every) They were immediately put into| with the campaign for signitures | barber, for the Superior Court. 1s Se ea ee Put Part Ballot ‘the other of 10 per cent—at the Mees eae even asked If there | Monday, Wednesday and Nridays at). cell without velug' allowed’ to send 44 a f the state is (sides them, there will be five candi U arty on ballo | ti - sing the speed-up | 18 ® “boarder” in the house; or i P. M. oedito L In th | under way, a tour of the state is dates for the House of Representa-|A5() : ; e same time increasing the speed-up word to the I. L. D. In the morning | peing made by Wm. Simons. lates for the House of Representa 55() Workers Attended | Jobless Workers Hear jing election. He also exposed the| the judge decided to place them un-| ‘The unemployment Insurance Bill | tives, for the State Be ate and ‘ graft connected with the city's der $1000 bond each. No charge) ;, gnding a fine response among the | the General Assembly, from Phila ; was made they were told, the police workers here. Many workers sign delphia, Pittsburgh and other indus. | feeble gesture to s would Investigate them. After elt petitions very readily once they ral ee of GG Gath a th — se AMI NTO, Ca ept. 18— while they were brought before the | near that the Party {s proposing a 5 ss hina pet a ie uss eS em ane Chief be ae pet a that the yin for unemployment insurance. nae ERAT cn ene ated tha’ ; £ aa Park and or fe For- case should be dismissed. ji ; c 5 ainly concen rs’ H found 650 workers in Fight Filipino Exclusion : Sve Le Selene HE DL The bosses of Jersey City know} oq, assis: member of the Ma- ps teeh cratne Nene coe tne Worle capital elty of the “Golden that the young workers are militant, | cninists Union Local 68, running for Social Insurance Bill and immedi hear the message BALTIMORE, Ma. Sept. 19 | 774 Per cent. The Communist Party is taking ad- | Along the waterfront eighteen . ac-' ships were recently tied up in the xposur N vantage of the election campaign | short period of two weeks and still | Exposure of Graft \ to strengthen and intensify its) A work in the city of Baltimore. In| paces conjunction with the election cam- | from two to three thousand, was in : paign workers are being organized | 700 000 BOND line before the “Free” Employment Comrade Baal spoke for the Food : into Unemployed Councils and the} 5 Agency when the Unemployed Coun- | Workers Industrial Union and Com- Trade Union Unity League. Or-) : cil arrived yesterday. Two Meetings Ive the unem- ployment situation by establishing a “Free” Employment Agency. The usual line of job-seekers, here, one ot rate: y a | rade Harrison, of the Workers Bx-| that they are beginning to fight un- ate relief for the unemployed in out 20 per cent of the we h 4 ‘ | | |congress on the platform of the aE eepniaa ar + it & Sey nding intaiatted ba et FOR “SOCIALIST” As soon as the Unemployed Coun- service Men's League, spoke on the |der the leadership of the Young| communist Party in the Sth Con-|Se8d of Keoee ates oF ane oe bagi asia e ‘As it requires the names of 8,000. Mee ieee ine Ma | workers in the last world war andj eauavens League for the six-hour gressional District of San Francisco, Leste Seay eeonte tlie Maratea anaes eH : oa 4 registered voters before a candidate | oot tout of tic “Pree” & » and | told how it will be the duty of the | °2¥ five-day week, better working | wij] make the fight against Filipino AGAiia sandals lndiion sak tie cat ; ie : ear on the ballot, squads of Capitalists I ont of the ree’ gency an . , | conditions and all the other de- | oxciusion one of the main issues of p i eae aeons Mae ii | apitalists Ignore gathered to hear what our Com- soldiers in the looming imperialist) mands put forward by the Y..C. L.| nis campaign. He is being opposed |‘*#list parties, the fake liberal Pin.) ‘The Keen interest in the Unem palsy he aueaiting them ne Communist Campaign rades had to tell them. |war, the forces of which the bosses | The bosses are trying to stop this|»y Richard J. Welch, Republican, |C2% Who 18 promising everything nd’ the palates ul ts H. Williams, a Negro Worker, | are rapidly mobilizing, and how {t| organization by arresting those who | who was a si rter of the Filipino who is thundering against the mo: » against bringing the message of Commu-| we W YORK.—The cepitalist|was the Chairman of the mocting |are active in the struggle for the! ety Pino | nopolies, but who, a millionaire him ped-up and imperial nism into the homes of the workers | _ ti, A ABS : =) RS vould be the duty of the workers | exclusion act in Congress. 7 ee cli acs nd - and enlisting new members into our ?tC8% Which is trying hard to ig-|and told how the Tammany Hall) 1) pont for the posses but| WOTRerS against the bosses. The| With the crisis in agriculture be- Pea ctr amen OE ob: Hs GEUNEY (Bb) wa s n the purchase Ms Prt nore the Communist campaign, has! fakers and the Democratic Party 8 | young workers of Jersey City are and other capitalists advocates of by the v rs suffering from the struggle against capitalism. | : if i ‘ 2 rene] , inethels blondes slaneh ic 3 jcoming depeer throughout the State th val AANA bon wri ce the J pee. e | heralded the news yesterday that|are attempting to mislead the work-| ®sainst them im their bloody slaugh | senting back by organizing into the | o¢ California, the bosses are organ- | ‘@@ OPe-shop, child-labor and of th: ot $8 th of Communist 0. Election Rally. | Irving Berlin, composer of Broad-| ers into voting for them at the com-'ter for profits. VoGi ti, ising “eacesiota” inst the Fi | gh tarim. literature including Daily Workers, 6 Many factory gate and open air! way son build} 00,000 | Sa PA ALOR eae = i na ee ee y ’ » so-cal 1 con $14 to the Ci i | way igs, is building a $200,000, —. ~ fT york tti h th We will show off the so-called 1 of $14 to the Com- meetings are being held. A huze hose for himself and Mrs. Berlin, Yr; ” s ” TD . vine for the wage cuts and thelfriend of labor, endorsed by t 1 t mpaign fund at clection rally in Baltimore, Oct. 3. wo a ane daughter of tw mane VOL “Weet’’ oy “Dry”, But Food, Clothing and | raneiorsite set itt teat leaders of the Americ et erie ae CRUCIATE anal millionaire Clarence Mackay. | f nn ‘ | tural workers in this state, of Labor, J. J. Davis, whose rd S Amento organ St. Ric . | tus is the kind of supporters | Sh hh . N d , t} M S t ee eee as Secretary of Labor during ths ine « ( mist Party berger iisaresd will speak. a | the “socialist” party has, Irving| é er (Za 0 1é aSSeS ay COMMUNIS $ CHILD LABOR IN past three Republican, strike Nisirman at th meet pe e or governor on the: provtin and Ellen Mackay are on) ing, open shop administration, spea k m Simo it. Communist Farty ticket is Samuel’ the list of supporters of "the Park onary eae = | FACTORY OWNED for Itselt, ‘The attacks of the 1 ee abe yy iH Parker, a Negro waiter, former Ave, “socialit,” Heywood Broun.| “The Democrats and the Re-|'The issne ts not unemployed re-y tle to refuse to continue as United | a yy jocratic candidates against the / agricultural worker and Jim y. Jongshoreman, and member of the ‘they are but a few of the million-| publicans are trying to get the! lief and the unemployment prob-| States ttorney. He chose the is-) BY SOGJALIST Hoover “prosperity” and their 1 See x econ reer abe AS toe aires, real estate speculators, Wall) unemployed workers drunk with| lem, but—prohibition! sue of prohibition. In his resig-| — ing of the smokescreen of pro! s der of the 15,000 y- 42 Sala tee ver shiny late for Street brokeers, corporation lz Jers | the prohibition issue,” Comrade I.| ‘Tuttle Out To Get Republican | nation, Mr. Tuttle expresses his; worker, 17 years old, was com-jtion as the main issue does n ‘ who onstrated tent needle trades workers Teadora| 224, other bourgeois and petty-bour-/ Amter, Communist candidate in the Nomination opinion for the repeal of the 18th| pletely scalped by a machine in|cover up thoir being a Party of agwinst the capitalist candidate bt lien ia WasOsii ial {sadora| geois elements that are supplying | 23rd Congressional District, Bronx,| “Mr. Charles H. Tuttle, who on amendment whieh, in spite of his) whic hhis hair was caught. He/ big capital, just as the G. 0. P 1 nment last et andid te re Re epee vend the “socialist” party with money | declared in a statement issued at) Tuesday resigned hs position as denials will serve as a vehicle for, worked at the Syracuse Ornamen-| “The Socialist Party is offering raised sue of clasa 1 Ge ida K ly a geil dis an | just as the democratic and repub-| Hart’s Island Penitentiary yester- United States Attorney ni order to getting nominated as the head of| tal Co., notorious for its low wages |its service to capitalism by coming ass in t lection cam: Id. Midd foe alae oF if ja ae | lican parties are supplied with} day. | get the nomination on the Republi- the Republican ticket in New York | and employment of child labor. The | forward as the third Party of the who recived the or ronw fh rk of the court o: | money by the capitalist class. Fake Isse |can ticket, did not say in his let-| State. young worker will remain disfig-| bosses in order to prevent the work- endorsement of the exploiters of all ey Bo seal | The Communist Party cannot! “Many workers, not . knowing! ter to President Hoover that he is! “In Massachusetts, Delaware,| ured for life, being made completely | ers trom coming over to the side of the capitalist parties will receive no This will be the first time the| conduct its campaign unless the} what the capitalists areafter, will not satisfied with the way the un- Connecticut, Ohio and other states,| bald by the accident. The owner of|Communism. Just as in Great Bri-| opposition in his ci ign except he Communist Party will appear on| workers will immediately come for-| be astounded to nd prohibition as| employment workers are treated, where primaries were held on Tues-| the factory is an “oldtime” social: | tain, Germany, etc., where they have from the Par the workers, the et the ballot, under its own name, in! ward with their contributions! The! the main issue of the present cam- that he is not satised with Hoover's, day, the issue between the various! ist and still contributes to the so-| been given the government by the Communist the state of Maryland. | Red Campaign, the campaign for| paign, as witnessed by Tuesday’s numerous ‘prophesies’ as to the! contestepts on the Democratic and_| cialist party treasury. bosses, the Maurers and Van Essens| Some ne ago Simons visited O8 . * Unemployment. unemployed relief, the campaign) primaries. In a situation of un-| time when the ‘republican prosper-| Republican tickets was the 18th! The Young Communist League|are out to ‘Improve’ on capitalism, | car kson 2 years in Generally, conditions are such in} against capitalism and for a Soviet | employment, which is a matter of| ity’ will return, Neither unem- | Amendment. Both parties are us-| has been conducting activity inthis| to come out with mild demands for | San tin on criminal syndicak Maryland that the workers easily| Government, cannot develop with-/ life and death for 8 million un- ployment, nor injunctions, club- ing prohibition as a means of get-| factory-for the last month and has | certain reforms, in order to make | ism char brought to prevent the « seo the extent of the intense ex-j out your contribution! Send it in| employed workers, who wit!» their! bing, jail and other means of keep- | ting the working masses drunk, in| succeeded in or anizing a shop nu- the present system more acceptable | imperial Valley strike, Wrickson is ploitation. today! All contributions will be| families comprise a population of ing the workers in snbmission, did order to make them forget the real | cleus of the League, around which|to the working masses, who must Communist candidate for Meutenant T. U. U. L, work is being carried on, | establish a mass-party of their own,’ The American Refinery has shut published in the press! between 25 and 85 million people.’ not serve as reasons for Mr. Tut-| problems of the campaign, ¢ se